JPMorgan Said Among Seven Banks to Get Libor Subpoenas

JPMorgan Chase, Barclays and UBS are among seven banks subpoenaed in New York and Connecticut's investigation into alleged manipulation of Libor, according to a person familiar with the matter and company filings.

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Subpoenas were sent in recent weeks to Deutsche Bank AG, Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, and HSBC Holdings Plc in addition to Barclays and JPMorgan, said the person. Citigroup Inc. and UBS received subpoenas earlier this year as part of the investigation.

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and Connecticut Attorney General George Jepsen are jointly investigating alleged manipulation of the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, by lenders. RBS, UBS, Lloyds Banking Group Plc and Deutsche Bank are among the lenders regulators in Europe, Asia and the U.S. are investigating.

Confidence in Libor, a benchmark for financial products valued at $360 trillion worldwide, has been dented by Barclays's admission that it submitted false rates. Robert Diamond resigned as Barclays' chief executive after the bank was fined 290 million pounds ($454 million).

Jennifer Givner, a spokeswoman for Schneiderman, and Jaclyn Falkowski, a spokeswoman for Jepsen, declined to comment on the subpoenas.

Sarah Binnie, a spokeswoman for RBS, said the bank continues to receive requests from various regulators investigating the setting of Libor and other interest rates. The lender is cooperating with the investigations and "keeping relevant regulators informed," she said in e-mail.

"It is not possible to estimate with any certainty what effect these investigations and any related developments may have on the group," Binnie said.

Kathryn Hanes, a spokeswoman for Deutsche Bank, said the lender has received subpoenas and requests for information from certain regulators and governmental entities in the U.S. in connection with setting interbank rates and is cooperating.

New York-based Citigroup said in a regulatory filing that subsidiaries "have received additional requests for information and documents from various U.S. and non-U.S. governmental agencies, including the offices of the New York and Connecticut attorneys general."

UBS said in a regulatory filing that numerous agencies, including "various state attorneys general" are investigating whether there were improper attempts to manipulate Libor and other rates. A second person familiar with the matter said the bank received a subpoena from New York in February. Both declined to comment because the matter is private.

JPMorgan spokesman Joe Evangelisti, Juanita Gutierrez at HSBC and Barclays spokesman Michael O'Looney declined to comment on the subpoenas.

New York-based JPMorgan dropped almost 1 percent on the news. JPMorgan was unchanged at $37.10 at 3:36 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. London-based Barclays's American depositary receipts fell 7 cents to $11.46. One receipt equals four shares. Zurich-based UBS fell 2 cents to $10.72 in New York. Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank rose 8 cents to $30.77.


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